Product Media

Product Description

The year is 1890 and Bible professor Russell Carlisle (D. David Morin) has written a new manuscript "The Changing Times." His book is about to receive a unanimous endorsement from the board members of the Grace Bible Seminary until his colleague Dr. Norris Anderson (Gavin MacLeod) raises an objection. Dr. Anderson believes that what Carlisle has written could greatly affect the future of coming generations. Using a secret time machine, Anderson sends Carlisle over 100 years into the future, offering him a glimpse of where his beliefs will lead. Rated PG (for thematic elements). Closed-captioned. Approx. 90 minutes. Bonus Features:

53-Minutes Documentary

"The Making of Time Changer"

Promos/Trailer

Director/Actor Commentary

Deleted Scenes

Scene Selections

Spanish Language Version

A Special Message from the Director

DVD Playable in Bermuda, Canada, United States and U.S. territories. Please check if your equipment can play DVDs coded for this region. Learn more about DVDs and Videos

Very interesting film. Just one place where man is brought into the future while marveling at his surroundings the music drags out that part - wish could have been different. However highly recommended because times may change but Christ remains the same. This film brings out how sharing Christ changes hearts and lives not just stressing good morals and when doing so we as Christians end up finding great struggles in a sin cursed world. Without Christ leads to Christless living.

I loved Time Changer because it was both entertaining and thought-provoking. Through the experience of a time-traveler from the 1800's who voyages to modern-day 21st century, we are asked the question: Who determines what is right and wrong, and why does it matter? Sprinkled with humor, we are also gently confronted with a deeper message. As Christians, why is it especially important to recognize the One who ultimately sets our moral standards? And how should this impact the way we raise our children, how we spend our time, or the manner in which we relate to others? This is a light-hearted movie with a deep message (I don't know how they do that!) that wraps up with a clever ending. I REALLY enjoyed this film and have loaned my copy to several friends.